Metabolic reprogramming driven by Ant2 deficiency augments T Cell function and anti-tumor immunity in mice

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Abstract

T cell activation requires a substantial increase in NAD+ production, often exceeding the capacity of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). To investigate how T cells adapt to this metabolic challenge, we generate T cell-specific ADP/ATP translocase-2 knockout (Ant2−/−) mice. Loss of Ant2, a crucial protein mediating ADP/ATP exchange between mitochondria and cytoplasm, induces OXPHOS restriction by limiting ATP synthase activity, thereby impeding NAD+ regeneration. Interestingly, Ant2−/− naïve T cells exhibit enhanced activation, proliferation and effector functions compared to wild-type controls. Metabolic profiling reveals that these T cells adopt an activated-like metabolic program with increased mitobiogenesis and anabolism. Lastly, pharmacological inhibition of ANT in wild-type T cells recapitulates the Ant2−/− phenotype and improves adoptive T cell therapy of cancer in mouse models. Our findings thus suggest that Ant2-deficient T cells bypass the typical metabolic reprogramming required for activation, leading to enhanced T cell function and highlighting the therapeutic potential of targeting ANT for immune modulation.

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Yosef, O., Cohen-Daniel, L., Shamriz, O., Bar-On, Z., Salaymeh, W., Saragovi, A., … Berger, M. (2025). Metabolic reprogramming driven by Ant2 deficiency augments T Cell function and anti-tumor immunity in mice. Nature Communications , 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59310-3

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